Posts Tagged ‘Film Reviews’

dGenerate Titles Included in Top Films Lists

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Nice to see that some of our films are being recognized by some of the Best Films of the Year/Decade lists being released.

Film Comment has named Zhao Dayong’s Ghost Town as one of the top twenty unreleased films of the year. And Neil Young’s Film Lounge named Ying Liang films’ The Other Half and Taking Father Home two of the best foreign films of the decade.

Not to be excluded from all the fun, we will be releasing soon results from the dGenerate Films’ Top Chinese Films of the Decade poll.  Stay tuned!

Spreading Far and Wide

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

It’s always amazing to discover the global reach of some of our films. Some way or another, they find their way out of China and into theaters, festivals, and screens everywhere. Daily we hear from indie Chinese film enthusiasts from around the world and read reviews from publications we’ve never heard of.  Woke up this morning to see that the Irish Left Review has named Oxhide one of the top 100 films of the decade.  Here’s what the ILR says about Oxhide:

I don’t expect that many people will rush out to watch this, a two-hour docudrama shot on low-resolution DV, entirely in a tanner’s workshop in Beijing, in long static takes, using the director’s family (including herself) as cast. It looks gloopy green and the camera never moves once but it is completely entrancing. The director Liu was only 25 at the time and she did practically everything on this film in an astounding piece of DIY filmmaking; as ever with prodigies of the sort, it has an incredible maturity and the performances she draws out of her cranky family’s quotidian life are marvellous. Despite the best efforts of the Chinese government to marshall cinematic output there is still good stuff being made and the freshness of the work never lets up.

Hopefully they are wrong about the first sentence, but the rest we can fully get behind.

CinemaTalk: Conversation with Richard Brody, Film Editor of The New Yorker

Monday, December 7th, 2009

dGenerate Films presents CinemaTalk, an ongoing series of conversations with esteemed scholars of Chinese cinema studies. These conversations are presented on this site in audio podcast and/or text format. They are intended to help the Chinese cinema studies community keep abreast of the latest work being done in the field, as well as to learn what recent Chinese films are catching the attention of others. This series reflects our mission to bring valuable resources and foster community around the field of Chinese film studies.

Richard Brody (Photo courtesy of <i>The New Yorker</i>)

Richard Brody (Photo courtesy of The New Yorker)

Richard Brody began writing for The New Yorker in 1999, and has contributed articles about the directors François Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, and Samuel Fuller. Since 2005, he has been the movie-listings editor at the magazine; he writes film reviews, a column about DVDs, and a blog about movies, The Front Row. He is the author of the book “Everything Is Cinema: The Working Life of Jean-Luc Godard.”

In this interview, dGenerate Films’ Kevin Lee talks to Richard Brody about his top ten films of the 2000s, in which he lists three Chinese feature films: Jia Zhangke’s The World, Wang Bing’s Fengming: A Chinese Memoir, and Ying Liang’s The Other Half. This conversation touches on all three films, and why Brody considers Chinese cinema to be “the crucial story in cinema of the past decade.” Brody also discusses two other films on his list, Jean-Luc Godard’s In Praise of Love and Claude Lanzmann’s Sobibor, 14 October 1943, 4PM, and their connection to the Chinese films he selected.

Brody’s full top ten list, and a topical index of the podcast with timecode follows after the break.

Play the Podcast (Time: 22:39) (right click to download)

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Ghost Town praised by New York critics

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Ghost_Town_3

Ghost Town, Zhao Dayong’s 2008 documentary about the residents of the Southwest Chinese town Zhiziluo, makes its International Premiere this Sunday at the New York Film Festival.  Film critics who attended the press screening have already given the film high marks.  Here are some highlights:

“Directed with scrupulous attention to detail by Zhao Dayong.” – Manohla Dargis, The New York Times, “The Serious Regard for Cinema

“One of the fest’s prime discoveries” – Keith Uhlich, Time Out New York, “NYFF Top Picks

“Give Ghost Town 15 minutes, and you won’t be able to shut it off… as compelling as any in the festival.” – J. Hoberman, Village Voice, “Five Must-See Films From the NYFF

“A heavyweight… It sure disproves one villager’s quip, cheekily placed near the beginning of the doc: ‘Go ahead and film, but there’s nothing worth filming here!’” – Nicolas Rapold, Village Voice, “NYFF: This Year’s Documentaries

“3 out of 4 stars!  Dayong’s direction exudes compassionate intimacy with regard to both individuals and spaces.” – Nick Schager, Slant Magazine, “Review: Ghost Town

“One of the most heartbreaking films to yet emerge from China’s prolific documentary movement.” – Andrew Chan, Reverse Shot, “Ghost Town

“So rich in detail and incident that when it ended… I felt as if I’d just returned from a week-long visit. Ghost Town casts a powerful spell.” – Nelson Kim, Hammer to Nail, “Must-Sees at the 47th NYFF

“Hypnotic” – Vadim Rizov, GreenCine Daily, “NYFF ’09

A Couple Reviews that “Nailed” our Films

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

Critic Nelson Kim of Hammer to Nail can definitely be considered an enthusiast of Chinese indie cinema, judging from a couple of recent reviews. In anticipation of NYC area screenings of two of our films, The Other Half (at the China Institute and Film Society of Lincoln Center) and Super, Girls! (at BAM), Kim reviewed both films. Here’s a choice excerpt from each:

The Other Half

Ying’s style offers a rich and fascinating combination of different modes, different registers: on one level, he’s operating as a journalist or documentarian, reporting on what he observes around him, from everyday domestic dissatisfaction to wider forms of political, economic, and cultural malaise (environmental degradation plays a major part in the storyline), while his elliptical approach to narrative and his highly expressive long-take technique place him in the tradition of contemporary art-house filmmaking, especially his fellow Sino-cineastes Hou Hsiao-hsien and Jia Zhang-khe. But unlike those two masters, Ying seems to be reaching for a more emotionally direct and accessible mode of address. In The Other Half he gives us suspense-building subplots, sudden dramatic reversals, surprise revelations, and outbursts of rage, regret, and yearning. This is the stuff of mainstream melodrama, and Ying’s remarkable facility at weaving such elements into what’s otherwise a reserved, carefully modulated mood piece suggests that he’s aiming for a fusion of art-film formal rigor and audience-friendly entertainment. Where he goes from here is anyone’s guess, but viewers are advised to start paying attention—after only two films, Ying has already passed beyond the merely “promising” phase; there are few young filmmakers anywhere in the world whose next work I’m more eager to see.

Read the full review

Super, Girls!

It’s been said that the USA is both the youngest of the great world powers, and also, paradoxically, the oldest, since we were the first to experience so many innovations of modern life. What comes through most clearly in Super, Girls! is its portrait of a very old culture rushing headlong into the hyper-capitalist future, in which business values trump all others, individualism clashes with traditional ideals of collectivism and community, and self-promotion lays the smackdown on Confucian humility. When the national finalists gather onstage to sing the show’s theme song, we could be listening to an American pop anthem, but really, it’s a lyrical expression of a dream that has long outgrown its Hollywood and Broadway origins and taken over the world: I’m empowered by joy. I shine like no other. Every caring eye sees my growth. Although Super, Girls! structures itself via the timeline provided by the rounds of competition, Jian doesn’t push things too hard—he understands there’s no need to hype up the suspense unnecessarily. Some contestants win, some lose, some surrender their hopes while others vow to try again another day. But the real drama here, the heart of the film’s appeal, is the view it provides of an entire nation in the grip of massive, all-encompassing change.

Read the full review